Difference between revisions of "Intermarriage" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Othellopainting.jpeg|thumb|right|300px|Othello and Desdemona from [[William Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Othello]],'' a play concerning a biracial couple.]]
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'''Intermarriage''' is the [[marriage]] between two people of different backgrounds. This background can be either [[religion|religious]] (such as a [[Christian]] marrying a [[Jew]]) or [[race|racial]] (such as an [[Asia]]n person marrying a person of [[Africa]]n descent). Views towards each type of intermarriage have evolved throughout history, although each remains controversial in certain sects of modern society.
  
'''Interreligious marriage''', traditionally (especially in the Catholic Church) called [[mixed marriage]], is [[marriage]] (either [[religious aspects of marriage|religious]] or [[civil marriage|civil]]) between partners professing different [[religion]]s. Some religions prohibit interreligious marriage, while other religions allow it, while most restrict it.  
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Intermarriage is a form of [[exogamy]], or marrying outside of one's social group. Whether that group is defined by religion, race, or other difference, the difference is a barrier that is not easy to cross. When historical meetings of the groups have led to [[conflict]] and violence, the fear of the other becomes hatred and the barrier almost impenetrable. Marrying and producing children across such a barrier is difficult if not unthinkable and impossible.
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With increasing contact between different peoples of the planet, views towards inter-religious and inter-racial marriage have changed considerably. Many such marriages have taken place, and the children, while still experiencing some isolation, have begun to find their place in the world. In fact, it may be that the effect of intermarriage is to overcome the barriers and tensions between those of different social groups through the bonding of new familial groups. Such families may be the foundation of a happier world of [[peace]] and harmony.
  
== Reasons for prohibition ==
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==Overview==
Prohibitions against interreligious marriage without the conversion of the spouse can have a number of reasons:
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[[Image:Douglass Helen Eva Frederick.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Frederick Douglass]] with his second wife [[Helen Pitts Douglass]] (sitting) who was white, a famous nineteenth century American example of "[[miscegenation]]." The woman standing is her sister Eva Pitts.]]
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Intermarriage is the [[marriage]] of people from two different [[religion|religious]] or [[race|racial]] backgrounds. Participants in intermarriage have faced social difficulties throughout history for various reasons including [[prejudice]], ignorance, and [[xenophobia]]. Those whose marriages involve different races have suffered [[racial discrimination]], if not outright rejection by societies in which [[miscegenation]] (the mixing of races) was illegal. Those who marry from a different religious tradition may also face rejection, especially if one of the traditions teaches that only those faithful to their beliefs receive [[salvation]] and can go to [[heaven]]; all others being condemned to eternal [[hell]].
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Intermarriage is a form of [[exogamy]], or marrying outside of one's social group. With increasing contact between different peoples of the planet, relationships and marriages that cross racial and religious boundaries have become more common. However, couples and the children of intermarriage face issues of social isolation and lack of definitive cultural identity.
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==Interreligious Marriage==
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[[Religion]] is a difficult subject to broach for romantically involved couples. Crossing religious lines for the sake of marriage was once, and still is, considered by some to be an act of [[apostasy]]. The traditional view of promoting marriage within one's faith community stems from the fact that religion has traditionally dominated culture and social life, so to wed someone outside of this group would be wholly alien. There are still many reasons why religion acts as a barrier to marriage:  
 
* Some religions view their rules on marriage as commandments from [[God]].
 
* Some religions view their rules on marriage as commandments from [[God]].
* A few religions view themselves as a priestly people, with a specific mission to carry out.
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* In a few religions adherents view themselves as a [[priest]]ly people, with a specific mission to carry out.
 
* Some people believe that introducing two contradictory belief systems into a marriage is grounds for marital strife, and increases the rate of [[divorce]].
 
* Some people believe that introducing two contradictory belief systems into a marriage is grounds for marital strife, and increases the rate of [[divorce]].
* Some believe that having parents of two opposing religions causes psychological stress on the children in such a marriage, as they often are effectively forced to "choose" one parent's faith over another.
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* Some believe that having parents of two different religions causes psychological stress on the children in such a marriage, as they often are effectively forced to "choose" one parent's faith over another.
* [[Religious intolerance]]. A person professing a different faith is considered incompatible and not worth marrying.
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* Religious intolerance leads some to believe that a person professing a different faith is considered incompatible and not worth marrying.
* The possibility of temptation to "wrong" practices by the "outsider" spouse, as well as the possibility of the children growing up in the "other" faith, or torn between two faiths.  
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* There is the possibility of temptation to "wrong" practices by the "outsider" spouse, as well as the possibility of the children growing up in the "other" faith, or torn between two faiths.  
 
* Some religions, such as the [[Druze]] religion, are closed communities and do not accept new members, whether through marriage or through conversion.
 
* Some religions, such as the [[Druze]] religion, are closed communities and do not accept new members, whether through marriage or through conversion.
  
 
When a man and a woman professing different religions want to marry, and the religious laws of the faith upheld by one of them forbid this, they might:
 
When a man and a woman professing different religions want to marry, and the religious laws of the faith upheld by one of them forbid this, they might:
 
* abandon the relationship and seek a partner of their own faith,
 
* abandon the relationship and seek a partner of their own faith,
* consider the [[Religious conversion|Conversion]] of one spouse,
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* consider the [[Religious conversion|conversion]] of one spouse,
* [[Cohabitation|live as if married with no ceremony]],
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* live as if married with no ceremony,
* [[Civil marriage|have a purely civil marriage ceremony]], or
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* have a purely civil marriage ceremony, or
 
* if one of the two religions does allow interreligious marriage, hold the wedding according to the ritual of the accepting religion.
 
* if one of the two religions does allow interreligious marriage, hold the wedding according to the ritual of the accepting religion.
  
== Views of religions on interreligious marriage ==
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These opinions are shifting, however. Increased foreign travel and a trend towards secularism have de-emphasized the importance of religion in the lives of many. Attitudes towards inter-religious marriage are becoming more liberal in the developed world, removing the once powerful stigma that may have suppressed inter-religious marriages in the past. Many see intermarriage as a good opportunity for diversity and are in fact attracted to others specifically because they are not members of their own religious sect. While some may only be interested in experiencing something different, for others intermarriage is seen as a way to break down barriers and bring harmony between different faith communities.
=== Judaism ===
 
Intermarriage in Judaism is informed by two basics of [[Jewish law]]. First, the child of a Jewish female is considered to be Jewish, regardless of the faith of its father, while, historically, the child of a male Jew and a female non-Jew is not (see [[Who is a Jew?]]). Second, a Jewish marriage is, by definition, a contract between two Jews (see [[Ketubah]]). Intermarriage under strict Jewish law is therefore not only forbidden, but actually impossible. Questions of civil intermarriage arise when rabbis are asked to officate at civil marriage ceremonies.
 
 
 
==== Intermarriage within individual branches of Judaism ====
 
[[Orthodox Judaism]] strictly forbids interreligious marriage as well as any sexual intercourse with a member of a different faith. Secular intermarriage is seen as a deliberate rejection of [[Judaism]], and an intermarried person is effectively cut off from most of the Orthodox community. However, some Chabad-Lubavitch and [[Modern Orthodox Jews]] do reach out to intermarried Jews{{Fact|date=July 2007}}.
 
 
 
[[Conservative Judaism]] rejects intermarriages as being a violation of [[halakha]], and as causing severe demographic harm to the Jewish people. Conservative rabbis are not allowed to perform intermarriages. However, the Leadership Council of Conservative Judaism has a more nuanced understanding of this issue than does Orthodoxy. The Conservative movement has stated:
 
 
 
:In the past, intermarriage...was viewed as an act of rebellion, a rejection of Judaism. Jews who intermarried were essentially [[excommunication|excommunicated]]. But now, intermarriage is often the result of living in an open society....If our children end up marrying non-Jews, we should not reject them. We should continue to give our love and by that retain a measure of influence in their lives, Jewishly and otherwise. Life consists of constant growth and our adult children may yet reach a stage when Judaism has new meaning for them. However, the marriage between a Jew and non-Jew is not a celebration for the Jewish community. We therefore reach out to the couple with the hope that the non-Jewish partner will move closer to Judaism and ultimately choose to convert. Since we know that over 70 percent of children of intermarried couples are not being raised as Jews...we want to encourage the Jewish partner to maintain his/her Jewish identity, and raise their children as Jews.
 
:''Leadership Council of Conservative Judaism, Statement on Intermarriage. Adopted on March 7, 1995''
 
 
 
[[Reform Judaism]] and [[Reconstructionist Judaism]] (known internationally as [[Progressive Judaism]]) discourage intermarriage, but, since they do not view [[Halakha|halacha]] as binding, have no mechanism for legal prohibition of the practice in the manner of the Conservative and Orthodox movements. Progressive rabbinical associations have no blanket prohibition on their members officiating at intermarriages. As a result, some Progressive Rabbis do perform such weddings without fear of the sanction faced by their Conservative counterparts. Intermarried Progressive Jews are encouraged to raise their children in the Jewish faith, and to become part of the local Jewish community, even if the [[Gentile]] partner does not convert to Judaism. Gentile spouses of Jews are welcome in Progressive synagogues as long as they do not [[proselytization|proselytise]]. See also: [[Reform Judaism#Jewish identity and inter-religious marriages|Reform views on intermarriage]].
 
 
 
==== The demographic crisis ====
 
In addition to being prohibited by Jewish law and custom, intermarriage is often criticised by [[rabbi]]s and other community leaders as demographically harming the Jewish people, since relatively few children of mixed marriages are raised as Jews. (See also: [[Silent Holocaust]]) In the [[United States of America|U.S.]] the Jewish community has decreased dramatically due to high rates of intermarriage, low rates of Jewish education and the late ages of marriage. This last trend leads to later ages of childbirth and fewer children being born. For every 20 adult Jews, there are now only 17 Jewish children. On this topic [[Elliot N. Dorff]] writes:
 
 
 
:[There is now] a major demographic crisis for the Jewish community. Nothing less than the future of the Jewish community and of Judaism depends upon fertile Jews having three or four children per couple. We as a people are in deep demographic trouble. We lost one-third of our numbers during the [[Holocaust]]....The current Jewish reproductive rate among American Jews between 1.6 and 1.7. That statistic means we are killing ourselves off as a people....This social imperative has made propagation arguably the most important [[mitzvah]] of our time....To refuse to try to have them, or to plan to have only one or two is to refuse to accept one of God's great gifts. It is also to renege on the duty we all have to create the next generation. . . "
 
:''This is My Friend, This is My Beloved''
 
 
 
[[Halakha|Jewish law]] prohibits conversion to Judaism merely for the purpose of marriage, but, outside of Orthodoxy, people who express a sincere interest in Judaism that was sparked by a desire to marry Jews are generally welcomed.
 
 
 
===Samaritanism===
 
[[Samaritan]] men are allowed to marry women outside their community, on the condition that the wife accept the Samaritans' practices. This lies short of conversion and can qualify as interreligious marriage. The decision to allow this kind of marriage has been taken in modern times to keep the Samaritan community from dying out of genetic disease.
 
 
 
=== Christianity ===
 
Many Christians believe that anyone has the freedom to choose her or his partner for life, and that love has no boundaries. This attitude is found most often among those who may be identified as progressive or liberal Christians.
 
 
 
Some [[Christianity|Christian]] denominations forbid interreligious marriage, drawing from [[1 Corinthians]] 7 and [[2 Corinthians]] 6:14, and in some cases [[Deuteronomy]] 7:3.
 
 
 
The [[Catholic]] church requires permission for mixed marriages, which it terms all unions between Catholics and baptized non-Catholics, but such marriages are valid, though illicit, without it: the pastor of the Catholic party has authority to grant such permission.  Marriages between a Catholic and an unbaptized person are not sacramental, and fall under the impediment of [[Disparity of Worship|disparity of worship]] and are invalid without a dispensation, for which authority lies with the ordinary of the place of marriage.
 
 
 
=== Bahá'í Faith ===
 
According to the [[Bahá'í Faith]], all religions are inspired by God, therefore interreligious marriage is allowed. In that case, the [[Bahá'í marriage|Bahá'í ceremony]] should be performed, and the non-Bahá'í rite or ceremony can also be performed. If it is the case that both ceremonies are performed, the non-Bahá'í ceremony should not invalidate the Bahá'í ceremony and it should be made clear to all that the Bahá'í partner is a Bahá'í and is not accepting the religion of the other partner by going through with the ceremony. The Bahá'í partner should also abstain from undertaking any vows or statements that commit the Bahá'í to any declaration of faith in another religion or that are contrary to the principles of the Bahá'í Faith. The two ceremonies should happen on the same day, but the order is not important. The Bahá'í ceremony may be performed in the place of worship of the other religion provided that it is given equal respect to that of the non-Bahá'í ceremony and is clearly distinct from the non-Bahá'í ceremony.
 
 
 
=== Hinduism ===
 
[[Hinduism]] declares that there are always innumerable paths to God. And that one’s belief or perception of God is an individual matter and best left to the individual to decide his own path.
 
 
 
Thus, the Hindus have never hesitated to respect the freedom of other faiths to coexist and flourish and thus inter-religious marriages are accepted in Hindu society. It also does not put any obligation of faith on the non-Hindu partner. Inter-caste marriages were somewhat frowned upon but this too is becoming more acceptable with time. In metropolitan cities it is common to find couples with different faith, caste and regional background. There are numerous laws in the Indian legal system, safeguarding inter-faith marriage. Examples of such marriages occasionally appear in [[Kipling]]'s stories.
 
 
 
=== Islam ===
 
 
 
Islam only allows a man to marry a non-Muslim only if she is Christian or Jewish. The wife need not adopt any Muslim laws, and the husband is not allowed to keep her from going to [[church]] or [[synagogue]]. The early jurists of the most prominent schools of Islamic jurisprudence ruled in fiqh law that the marriage of a Muslim man to a Christian or Jewish women is mukruh (reprehensible) if they live in a non-Muslim country. The Caliph Umar (634–644) denied interfaith marriage for Muslim men during his command of the ummah. 
 
 
 
Fiqh also forbids Muslim women from marrying non-Muslim men, although there is nothing in the Quran nor the Sunnah that explicitly prohibits such unions. Some Muslim scholars (ahli kitab) go so far as to state that such a marriage is an act of apostasy, but with the growing number of such marriages, this position is being questioned. In some Muslim countries, if a non-Muslim woman is married to a non-Muslim, and she converts to Islam, the marriage is suspended until her husband converts to Islam. When he converts a new marriage is not needed.
 
 
 
== Interreligious marriages in the Bible ==
 
Even though Orthodox Judaism does not allow intermarriages, the [[Bible]] mentions a number of these among the Hebrews.
 
 
 
The marriages of the [[patriarchs (Bible)|patriarchs]] cannot be considered interreligious, as there were not yet any "Jewish" women to marry. It is true that even for the first Hebrews it was considered proper to marry members of the same [[nation]], however, and the Bible disapproves of [[Esau]] and [[Judah (biblical figure)|Judah]], who married Canaanites instead. [[Joseph (Hebrew Bible)|Joseph]] is recorded as marrying an [[Ancient Egypt|Egyptian]] woman, but the adoption of his sons by his father [[Jacob]] insured their place among the [[Hebrews]].
 
 
 
The first actually interreligious marriage mentioned is that of [[Moses]]. Generations later, the sons of [[Naomi (Tanakh)|Naomi]] married [[Ruth]] the Moabite and her sister. It is unclear whether they converted to the pagan Moabite religion. Rabbinical commentaries state that Ruth had already converted to Judaism before she married [[Boaz]], although there is no explicit mention of a formal conversion in the biblical text beyond her proclamation to Hebrew [[Naomi (Tanakh)|Naomi]] in Ruth 1:16 that 'Your God will be my God'.
 
 
 
The Biblical character most notorious for interreligious marriages was perhaps king [[Solomon]]. Many of his 700 wives were non-Hebrew and not only continued their pagan practices, but also tempted Solomon to participate therein.
 
 
 
Later on, in [[Babylonian captivity]] many members of aristocratic Hebrew families married local women. After some of these returned to their homeland, [[Ezra]] condemned these intermarriages and attempted to force such families to divorce. It is not clear whether he succeeded, however, many scholars agree that it was those husbands that wrote or edited the Book of Ruth.
 
 
 
[[Paul of Tarsus]] is often interpreted as forbidding the interreligious marriage of Christians in the sixth chapter of [[2 Corinthians]].
 
  
== Famous interreligious marriages ==
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=== Views of religions on interreligious marriage ===
Notably, in [[Christian mythology]], delineating [[Jesus Christ]]'s genealogy from a Jewish perspective, the [[Gospel of Matthew]] mentions a number of interreligious marriages in his lineage: those of [[Judah]] and Tamar, and of [[Ruth]] and [[Boaz]], mentioned above, as well as [[Rahab]], the prostitute of [[Jericho]] who aided the Israelites in taking that city, with the Israelite prince Salmon.
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==== Judaism ====
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Intermarriage in [[Judaism]] is informed by two basics of [[Jewish law]]. First, the child of a Jewish woman is considered to be Jewish, regardless of the faith of the father, while, historically, the child of a male Jew and a female non-Jew is not. Second, a Jewish marriage is, by definition, a [[contract]] between two Jews, involving a ''[[Ketubah]]'' or Jewish prenuptial agreement. This states that the husband commits to provide food, clothing, and marital relations to his wife, and that he will pay a specified sum of money if he [[divorce]]s her. If he dies and leaves her as a widow, she can collect the ''Ketubah'' money from his estate. The ''Ketubah'' is considered an integral part of a Jewish marriage. Intermarriage under strict Jewish law is therefore not only forbidden, but actually impossible.  
  
[[Akbar]] - a [[Mogul]] emperor who invented a new religion with heretical beliefs, married Hindu princess [[Jodhabai]]. Both of them practised their own faith and had great respect for the faith of other.
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[[Orthodox Judaism]] strictly forbids interreligious marriage as well as any sexual intercourse with a member of a different faith. Secular intermarriage is seen as a deliberate rejection of Judaism, and an intermarried person is effectively cut off from most of the Orthodox community.  
  
[[Image:Othellopainting.jpeg|thumb|right|300px|Othello and Desdemona from [[William Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Othello]]'', a play concerning a biracial couple.]]
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[[Conservative Judaism]] rejects intermarriages as being a violation of ''[[halakha]]'' (the collective corpus of Jewish religious law), and as causing severe demographic harm to the Jewish people. Conservative rabbis are not allowed to perform intermarriages. However, the Leadership Council of Conservative Judaism has a more nuanced understanding of this issue than does Orthodoxy. The Conservative movement has stated:
'''Interracial marriage''' occurs when two people of differing [[race]]s [[marriage|marry]].  This is a form of [[exogamy]] (marrying outside of one's [[social group]]) and can be seen in the broader context of [[miscegenation]] (mixing of different races in marriage, cohabitation, or sexual relations).
 
  
==Legality of Interracial Marriage==
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<blockquote>In the past, intermarriage … was viewed as an act of rebellion, a rejection of Judaism. Jews who intermarried were essentially [[excommunication|excommunicated]]. But now, intermarriage is often the result of living in an open society. If our children end up marrying non-Jews, we should not reject them. We should continue to give our love and by that retain a measure of influence in their lives, Jewish and otherwise. Life consists of constant growth and our adult children may yet reach a stage when Judaism has new meaning for them. However, the marriage between a Jew and non-Jew is not a celebration for the Jewish community. We therefore reach out to the couple with the hope that the non-Jewish partner will move closer to Judaism and ultimately choose to convert. Since we know that over seventy percent of children of intermarried couples are not being raised as Jews...we want to encourage the Jewish partner to maintain his/her Jewish identity, and raise their children as Jews. ''(Leadership Council of Conservative Judaism, Statement on Intermarriage. Adopted on March 7, 1995)''</blockquote>
While it is now legal in most countries, certain jurisdictions have had regulations banning or restricting interracial marriage in the past. These include [[South Africa]] under [[apartheid]], [[Germany]] in the [[Nazi]] period, and some states of the [[United States]].
 
  
==United States==
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[[Reform Judaism]] and [[Reconstructionist Judaism]] (known internationally as [[Progressive Judaism]]) discourage intermarriage, but, since they do not view ''halakha'' as binding, they have no mechanism for legal prohibition of the practice in the manner of the Conservative and Orthodox movements. Progressive rabbinical associations have no blanket prohibition on their members officiating at intermarriages. As a result, some Progressive Rabbis do perform such weddings without fear of the sanction faced by their Conservative counterparts. Intermarried Progressive Jews are encouraged to raise their children in the Jewish faith, and to become part of the local Jewish community, even if the [[Gentile]] partner does not convert to Judaism. Gentile spouses of Jews are welcome in Progressive synagogues as long as they do not [[proselytization|proselytise]].  
{{See also|Race (United States Census)}}
 
[[Image:Beach-wedding-couple.jpg|thumb|right|px|A black/white couple enjoying a moment during their wedding on the beach in [[Monterey, California]]]]
 
In ''Social Trends in America and Strategic Approaches to the Negro Problem'' (1948), [[Gunnar Myrdal]] ranked the social areas where restrictions were imposed by Southern whites on the freedom of African-Americans through [[racial segregation]] from the least to the most important: jobs, courts and police, politics, basic public facilities, “social equality” including dancing, handshaking, and most important, marriage. This ranking scheme seems to explain the way in which the barriers against [[desegregation]] fell. Of less importance was the segregation in basic public facilities, which was abolished with the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]]. The most tenacious form of legal segregation, the banning of interracial marriage, was not fully lifted until the last [[anti-miscegenation laws]] were struck down in 1967.
 
  
===Interracial marriage statistics===
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==== Christianity ====
In 1967, the Supreme Court ruling in ''[[Loving v. Virginia]]'' struck down the last of the anti-miscegenation laws in the United States, widening the available marriage choices.  The number of interracial marriages in the United States has been on the rise: from 310,000 in 1970, to 651,000 in 1980, and 1,161,000 in 1992, according to the US Census of 1993.  Interracial marriages represented 0.7% of all marriages in 1970, rising to 1.3% in 1980 and 2.2% in 1992.  With the introduction of the mixed-race category, the [[United States Census, 2000|2000 census]] revealed interracial marriage to be somewhat more widespread, with 2,669,558 interracial marriages recorded, or 4.9% of all marriages. <ref name=census/> (Here, marriages between two [[multiracial|mixed-race persons]], or where they are the same race but one is [[Hispanic]] and the other not, are not counted as interracial.) <ref name=census/>  In 2005 it is believed that 7% of married couples in the US are interracial.<ref name=census/> In general, the number of Asian and Hispanic marriages and cohabitations are more than whites and blacks. <ref name=census/>
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Many [[Christian]]s believe that anyone has the freedom to choose her or his partner for life, and that [[love]] has no boundaries. This attitude is found most often among those who may be identified as progressive or liberal Christians.
  
====Asian and American Indian====
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Some Christian denominations forbid interreligious marriage, drawing from [[1 Corinthians]] 7 and [[2 Corinthians]] 6:14, and in some cases [[Deuteronomy]] 7:3. The [[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints|Mormon Church]] emphasizes the doctrine of "celestial marriage" in which two people are eternally bound through marriage. Mormons believe this celestial marriage can only occur between members of the Mormon church, and thus oppose interreligious marriage for their faithful.  
Historically, Filipino Americans have frequently married [[Native Americans in the United States|American Indian and Alaskan Native]] people. In the 17th century, Filipinos were under Spanish rule.  The Spanish colonists ordered the Filipinos to trade between the Philippines and the Americas. When Mexico revolted against the Spanish, Filipinos escaped into Mexico, then traveled to Louisiana, where the exclusively male Filipinos married [[Native Americans in the United States|American Indian]] women. In the 1920s, [[Filipino American]] communities grew in [[Alaska]], and Filipino American men married [[Alaskan Native]] women. On the west coast, [[Filipino American]]s married American Indian women in [[Bainbridge Island]] [[Washington state|Washington]].<ref>Color Q World. [http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/article.aspx?d=America&x=AsianAndNative Asian and Native Intermarriage in the US.] September 1, 2006.</ref>
 
  
====Asian and White====
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The [[Catholic]] church requires permission for mixed marriages, which it terms all unions between Catholics and [[baptism|baptized]] non-Catholics, but such marriages are valid, though illicit, without it: the pastor of the Catholic party has authority to grant such permission. Marriages between a Catholic and an un-baptized person are not [[sacrament]]al, and fall under the impediment of [[disparity of worship]] and are invalid without a dispensation, for which authority lies with the ordinary of the place of marriage.
Marriages between [[White (people)|whites]] and [[Asian (people)|Asians]] are becoming increasingly common (Lange, 2005). In the US, about 69 percent of married Asian women are married to Asian men, while 25 percent of married Asian women have white husbands. <ref>Swanbrow, Diane. University of Michigan. "Intimate Relationships between Races More Common Than Thought." 2000. June 8,2007. [http://www.umich.edu/news/index.html?Releases/2000/Mar00/r032300a]</ref>  As a whole, the number of Asian female and white male marriages (including East Asians, South Asians, Southeast Asians, non-citizens and immigrants) are 3.0 times more than the reverse. <ref name=census>{{Citation
 
|title=Census 2000 PHC-T-19. Hispanic Origin and Race of Coupled Households: 2000
 
|url=http://www.census.gov/population/cen2000/phc-t19/tab01.pdf
 
}}</ref> However, C.N. Le <ref name=IDM>C.N. Le, "[http://www.asian-nation.org/interracial.shtml Interracial Dating & Marriage]", Asian-Nation: The Landscape of Asian America ([[May 30]], [[2007]]).Retrieved [[May 25]], [[2007]].</ref> estimated that the gender gap is smaller among the American-born or [[1.5 generation]] Asian Americans. Asian Americans of both genders who are U.S.-raised are much more likely to be married with whites than their non-U.S.-raised counterparts.    Not all Asian ethnicities have similar intermarriage patterns, for instance, [[Asian Indians]] were more [[endogamous]], while [[Japanese Americans]], [[Filipino Americans]], and other [[East Asians]] had higher outmarriage to whites.<ref name=IDM>C.N. Le, "[http://www.asian-nation.org/interracial.shtml Interracial Dating & Marriage]", Asian-Nation: The Landscape of Asian America ([[May 30]], [[2007]]).Retrieved [[May 25]], [[2007]].</ref>  A 2001 U.S. national survey indicated that 24% of the respondents disapprove of marriage with an Asian American, second only to African Americans at 34%.<ref name=sfgate>{{cite web|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2001/04/27/MN199998.DTL |author=Matthew Yi, et al. |title=Asian Americans seen negatively |accessdate=2007-06-14}}</ref>
 
  
====Black and White====  
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==== Bahá'í Faith ====
[[Image:William Cohen Janet Langhart.JPG|thumb|right|Former [[United States Secretary of Defense|Defense Secretary]] [[William Cohen]] and journalist [[Janet Langhart]], one of the more prominent interracial couples in the U.S. Langhart is herself biracial.]]
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According to the [[Bahá'í Faith]], all religions are inspired by [[God]], therefore interreligious marriage is allowed. In that case, the Bahá'í ceremony should be performed, and the non-Bahá'í rite or ceremony can also be performed. If it is the case that both ceremonies are performed, the non-Bahá'í ceremony should not invalidate the Bahá'í ceremony and it should be made clear to all that the Bahá'í partner is a Bahá'í and is not accepting the religion of the other partner by going through with the ceremony. The Bahá'í partner should also abstain from undertaking any vows or statements that commit the Bahá'í to any declaration of faith in another religion or that are contrary to the principles of the Bahá'í Faith. The two ceremonies should happen on the same day, but the order is not important. The Bahá'í ceremony may be performed in the place of worship of the other religion provided that it is given equal respect to that of the non-Bahá'í ceremony and is clearly distinct from the non-Bahá'í ceremony.
Although mixed-race partnering has increased, the United States still shows disparities between [[African American]] male and African American female [[endogamy]] statistics. The 1990 census reports that 17.6% of African American marriages occur with [[White American]]s. Yet, African American men are 2.5 times more likely to be married to white women than African American women to white men.  In the 2000 census, 239,477 African American male to white female and 95,831 white male to African American female marriages were recorded, again showing the 2.5-1 ratio.
 
  
====Asian and Black====
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==== Hinduism ====
With [[African American]]s and [[Asian American]]s, the ratios are even further imbalanced, with 598% more Asian female/Black male marriages than Asian male/Black female marriages. <ref name=census/> However, C.N. Le estimated that Asian Americans of the 1.5 generation and of the five largest Asian American ethnic groups had black male/Asian female marriages 272% more than Asian male/black Female relationships.<ref name=IDM /> Even though the disparity between Black and Asian interracial marriages by gender is high according to the 2000 US Census, <ref name=census/> the total numbers of Asian/Black interracial marriages are low, numbering only 2.2% percent for Asian male marriages and 10.2% percent of Asian female marriages, partially contributed by the recent flux of Asian immigrants. <ref name=census/>
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[[Hinduism]] declares that there are always innumerable paths to God, and that one’s belief or perception of God is an individual matter and best left to the individual to decide his own path.  
[[Image:Mixed-couple.jpg|right|thumb|175px|A Filipina bride and Nigerian groom walk down the aisle.]]
 
  
Historically, [[Chinese American]] men married African American women in high proportions to their total marriage numbers due to few Chinese American women being in the United States. After the [[Emancipation Proclamation]], many Chinese people immigrated to the American South, particularly [[Arkansas]], to work on plantations. The tenth [[US Census]] of [[Louisiana]] counted 57% of interracial marriages between these [[Chinese American]]s to be with [[African American]]s and 43% to be with [[White American]] women. After the [[Chinese Exclusion Act]], Chinese American men had fewer potential Chinese American wives, so they increasingly married African American women on the west coast.<ref>Color Q World. September 1, 2006.[http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/article.aspx?d=America&x=ChineseBlacks Chinese Blacks in the United States].</ref>
+
Thus, Hindus have never hesitated to respect the freedom of other faiths to coexist and flourish and so interreligious marriages are accepted in Hindu society. It also does not put any obligation of faith on the non-Hindu partner. Inter-[[caste]] marriages were, however, problematic, but this too is becoming more acceptable with time. In metropolitan cities it is common to find couples with different faith, caste, and regional background. There are numerous laws in the Indian legal system, safeguarding interfaith marriage. Examples of such marriages occasionally appear in [[Rudyard Kipling]]'s stories.
  
===White and American Indian===
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==== Islam ====
The interracial disparity for [[Native Americans in the United States|American Indians]] is low.  According to the 1990 US Census (which only counts indigenous people with US-government-recognized tribal affiliation), American Indian women intermarried [[White American]]s 2% more than American Indian men married White women.<ref>U.S. Bureau of the Census. [http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo/race/interractab1.txt Race of Wife by Race of Husband.] 1998. July 29, 2006.</ref>
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[[Islam]] allows a man to marry a non-Muslim only if she is [[Christian]] or [[Jew]]ish. The wife need not adopt any Muslim laws, and the husband is not allowed to keep her from going to [[church]] or [[synagogue]]. The early jurists of the most prominent schools of Islamic jurisprudence ruled in [[Fiqh]] law that the marriage of a Muslim man to a Christian or Jewish women is ''mukruh'' (reprehensible) if they live in a non-Muslim country. The Caliph Umar (634–644) denied interfaith marriage for Muslim men during his command of the ummah.  
  
===Marriage squeeze===
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Fiqh also forbids Muslim women from marrying non-Muslim men, although there is nothing in the [[Qur'an]] nor the ''Sunnah'' that explicitly prohibits such unions. Some Muslim scholars go so far as to state that such a marriage is an act of [[apostasy]], but with the growing number of such marriages, this position is being questioned. In some Muslim countries, if a non-Muslim woman is married to a non-Muslim, and she converts to Islam, the marriage is suspended until her husband converts to Islam. When he converts a new marriage is not needed.
A new term has arisen to describe the social phenomenon of the so-called "marriage squeeze" for African American females.<ref>Crowder, Kyle D, and Stewart E. Tolnay. [http://apt.allenpress.com/aptonline/?request=get-abstract&issn=0022-2445&volume=062&issue=03&page=0792 "A New Marriage Squeeze for Black Women: The Role of Racial Intermarriage by Black Men."]  2000.  August 14, 2006.</ref>  The marriage squeeze refers to the belief that the most eligible and desirable African American men are marrying non-African American women, leaving those African American women who wish to marry African American men with fewer partnering options.  According to Newsweek, 43% of black women between the ages of 30-34 have never been married.<ref>Razib. Gene Expression.  The Black Gender Gap.  2003.  November 5, 2006.[http://www.gnxp.com/MT2/archives/000493.html]</ref> Several explanations of this phenomenon have been advanced. In part it may be due to relatively fewer European American men being willing to marry African American women, as a result of the lingering effects of social ostracism, to which past [[white American]] men who have historically pursued relationships with African American women were heavily subjected,<ref name=Miller>Miller, Candace. [http://www.webcom.com/intvoice/candace.html Interracial Voice.  Sauce for the Goose.]  2001.  August 14, 2006.</ref> although today one in five white Americans would seriously consider marrying across the color line nonetheless.<ref name=Miller/>  It may also be the result of a desire among African American women to marry African American men due to concepts such as racial loyalty, black solidarity, and the internalized stereotypical belief that non-African American men would not find them attractive.<ref name=Miller/> There is also the lingering remembrance of the brutal rape and sexual abuse relationships that white men had with black women during and after slavery. Lastly, there is a desire among educated women of all races to "marry up", although rising income for women has lessened this factor.<ref>Melendez, Michele M. [http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20040425/news_mz1c25marry.html ''The San Diego Union-Tribune''.  Education is changing the face of wedded life.] 2004. August 14, 2006.</ref> Another confounding factor for African American women may be the disproportionate mortality rate between men and women in the black community: there are only approximately 85 males for every 100 females by the time they reach their child-bearing years.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}
 
  
===Education and interracial marriage===
+
==Interracial Marriage==
Using PUMS data from both the 1980 and 1990 US Census to determine trends within interracial marriage among [[White American]]s, [[African American]]s, [[Ethnicity (United States Census)|Hispanic or Latinos]], and [[Asian American]]s, it may be seen that [[endogamy]] (marrying within race) was more prevalent for African American men at lower education levels.
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Interracial marriage was formerly seen as grounds for shunning members of some societies. [[Xenophobia]] and outright [[racism]] bred close-minded laws and social mores against [[miscegenation]]. The [[taboo]] against interracial marriage has been largely lifted worldwide today as the world shrinks through easier travel and [[globalization]]. [[Love]] has proved incentive enough for many to overcome the barriers placed by a jealous old guard opposed to mixed marriages.
  
In 1980, the numbers were as follows: African American males without a high-school diploma participated in endogamy at 96.5%; for those who received a high-school diploma, 95.6%; for those with a college degree and above, the percentage of endogamy dropped to 94.0%. However, the rates for African American women changed very little with different educational levels. For the African American woman who had not received a high school diploma the rate was 98.7%, high school diploma was 98.6%, with some college it was 98.2%, and college degree or higher, 98.5%. During this time there was a significant increase in marriages between whites and African Americans, maintaining that African Americans are most likely to marry whites over other groups.
+
===United States===
 +
[[Image:Beach-wedding-couple.jpg|thumb|right|250 px|A black/white couple enjoying a moment during their wedding on the beach in [[Monterey, California]]]]
 +
In ''Social Trends in America and Strategic Approaches to the Negro Problem'' (1948), [[Gunnar Myrdal]] ranked the social areas where restrictions were imposed by Southern whites on the freedom of African-Americans through [[racial segregation]]. Ranked from the least to the most important were found to be: jobs, [[court]]s and [[police]], [[politics]], basic public facilities, “social equality” including dancing, handshaking, and most important, marriage. This ranking scheme seems to explain the way in which the barriers against [[desegregation]] fell. The segregation in basic public facilities, seen as of less importance than intermarriage, was abolished with the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]]. The most tenacious form of legal segregation, the banning of interracial marriage, was not fully lifted until the last [[anti-miscegenation laws]] were struck down in 1967.<ref>[http://www-personal.umich.edu/~kdown/loving.html Loving v. Virginia] ''University of Michigan.'' Retrieved August 15, 2007.</ref>
  
The 1990 results show that rates of endogamy dropped for both males and females, albeit more for the African American male. In 1990, an African American male with a college degree and more was participating in endogamy at 90.4%; for an African American female with the same educational level, 96.4%. The results for the propensity of individuals at higher educational attainment levels to participate less in endogamy over the 10-year period were similar across races, including whites, Hispanics, and Asian Americans.
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Interracial couples have made up an increasingly large percentage of the population of all American married couples. In 1960, 0.4 percent of all married couples were interracial. In 1992, 2.2 percent of all couples were interracial.<ref> Race of Wife by Race of Husband US Census.</ref>
  
===Immigrants and interracial marriage===
+
===United Kingdom===
[[Image:First-dance.jpg|thumb|left|An Iranian groom and a Mexican-American bride enjoy their first dance as a mixed-race married couple.]]  It is found that racial [[endogamy]] is much stronger for immigrants as compared to natives; it is 4.9 times more likely for immigrants of African descent than for African Americans. Additionally, immigrants of African descent have the highest rates of endogamy of immigrants. Also, African immigrants are much more likely to marry other same-race immigrants and African Americans, than to out-marry racially. Native-born White Americans are also 1.6 times more likely to marry a native-born African American than an immigrant of African descent.  Female immigrants of African descent are generally more likely to marry native-born whites than their male counterparts.
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As of 2001, two percent of all [[United Kingdom|UK]] marriages were inter-ethnic. Despite having a much lower non-white population (nine percent), mixed marriages are as common as in the [[United States]]. For example, Black British men are significantly more likely to have non-black wives than [[African American]] men; 18 percent of UK black African husbands, 29  percent of UK black Caribbean husbands, and 48 percent of other Black British husbands have a wife from a different ethnic group.<ref> [http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=1090 Inter-Ethnic Marriage: two percent of all marriages are inter-ethnic]. ''National Statistics.'' (2005). Retrieved August 23, 2007. </ref>
  
===Cohabitation and interracial marriage===
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According to the UK 2001 census, Black British males were around 50 percent more likely than black females to marry outside their race, whereas British Chinese women were twice as likely as their male counterparts to marry someone from a different ethnic group. Among British Asians ([[South Asia]]ns, not including Chinese), [[Pakistan]]i and [[Bangladesh]]i males were twice as likely to to have an inter-ethnic marriage than their female counterparts, while [[India]]n and "Other Asian" males were more likely to have an inter-ethnic marriage than their female counterparts by a smaller percentage.
The number of black men and white female marriages are 2.5 times more than the reverse. <ref name=census/> Also, Cohabitatation are 3.3 times more than the reverse. {{Fact|date=June 2007}} Research yields that 7% of married Black American men are with white wives and 15% of African American men cohabit with white women.{{Fact|date=January 2007}}
 
  
==United Kingdom==
+
===In Africa===
{{See also|United Kingdom Census 2001}}
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[[India]]n (Asian) men have married many [[Africa]]n women in Africa. Indians have long been traders in [[East Africa]]. The [[British Empire]] brought workers into East Africa to build the [[Uganda Railway]]. Indians eventually populated [[South Africa]], [[Kenya]], [[Uganda]], [[Tanzania]], [[Rwanda]], [[Rhodesia]], and [[Zaire]]. These interracial unions were mostly marriages between Indian men and East African women.<ref>[http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/article.aspx?d=Africa&x=Indians Jotawa: Afro-Asians in East Africa]. ''Color Q World.'' Retrieved September 1, 2006. </ref>
As of 2001, 2% of all UK marriages are inter-ethnic. Despite having a much lower non-white population (9%), mixed marriages are as common as in the [[United States]]. For example, [[Black British]] men are significantly more likely to have non-black wives than [[African American]] men; 18% of UK black African husbands, 29% of UK black Caribbean husbands, and 48% of other [[Black British]] husbands have a wife from a different ethnic group. <ref>National Statistics. Inter-ethnic Marriage. 2001. August 14, 2005. [http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=1090 Inter-Ethnic Marriage: 2% of all marriages are inter-ethnic].</ref>
 
  
===Interracial marriage disparities for certain groups===
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===In Asia===
A similar trend can be seen in the UK. According to the [[United Kingdom Census 2001|UK 2001 census]] <ref>National Statistics. Inter-ethnic Marriage. 2001. August 14, 2005. [http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=1090 Inter-Ethnic Marriage: 2% of all marriages are inter-ethnic].</ref>, [[Black British]] males were around 50% more likely than black females to marry outside their race, whereas [[British Chinese]] women were twice as likely as their male counterparts to marry someone from a different ethnic group. Among [[British Asian]]s ([[South Asia]]ns, not including Chinese), [[Pakistan]]i and [[Bangladesh]]i males were twice as likely to to have an inter-ethnic marriage than their female counterparts, while [[India]]n and "Other Asian" males were more likely to have an inter-ethnic marriage than their female counterparts by a smaller percentage.
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Many [[Asia]]n cultures, such as [[China]] and [[Korea]] have indelibly strong familial ties, which have often emphasized marriages that will satisfy all of the members of the family. As a result of this tight family network, marriage to outsiders has been seen as [[taboo]]. For example, in [[Japan]], non-ethnic Japanese residents have been called ''gaijin'' (meaning outsiders) and discriminated against in marriage and other relationships. This [[norm]] is changing as large Asian nations take their place in the world stage.
  
===Case of Seretse Khama===
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===Arranged intermarriages===
In 1948, an international incident was created when the British government took exception to the marriage of [[Seretse Khama]], ''kgosi'' (king) of the [[Bamangwato]] people of what was then the British Protectorate of [[Bechuanaland]], to an English woman, [[Ruth Williams]], whom he had met while studying law in London.  The interracial marriage sparked a furore among both the tribal elders of the Bamangwato and the [[apartheid]] government of [[South Africa]], who could not afford to have an interracial couple ruling just across their northern border, and who therefore immediately exerted pressure to have Khama removed from his chieftainship. Britain’s [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour]] government, then heavily in debt from [[World War II]], could not afford to lose cheap South African gold and uranium supplies. There was also a fear that South Africa might take more direct action against Bechuanaland, through economic sanctions or a military incursion.<ref>
 
{{cite book |last= Redfern|first= John|title= Ruth and Seretse: "A Very Disreputable Transaction"|year= 1955|publisher= [[Victor Gollancz]]|location= London|pages= p221|chapter= An appeal|quote = <small>The British government knew well enough, throughout the dispute, that the [[Union of South Africa|Union]] [of South Africa]'s Nationalist Government was playing up the theme of the protectorates, and that it was within the Union's power to apply economic sanctions at any time. (The latest available figures show that more than half the cattle exported from Bechuanaland go to the Union...)</small>}}</ref><ref>
 
{{cite web| url = http://www.innertemple.org.uk/archive/khama.html| title = The "Unfortunate Marriage" of Seretse Khama| accessdate = 2006-08-06| last = Rider| first = Clare| year = 2003| work = The Inner Temple Yearbook 2002/2003| publisher = [[Inner Temple]]| pages = }} <small>"Under the provisions of the South Africa Act of 1909, the Union laid claim to the neighbouring tribal territories and, as the [[Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations]] pointed out to the Cabinet in 1949, the 'demand for this transfer might become more insistent if we disregard the Union government's views'. He went on, 'indeed, we cannot exclude the possibility of an armed incursion into the Bechuanaland Protectorate from the Union if Serestse were to be recognised forthwith, while feeling on the subject is inflamed'."</small></ref>
 
The British government therefore launched a [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|parliamentary]] enquiry into Khama’s fitness for the chieftainship. Though the investigation reported that he was in fact eminently fit for the rule of Bechuanaland, "but for his unfortunate marriage",<ref>{{cite web
 
| url = http://www.innertemple.org.uk/archive/khama.html| title = The "Unfortunate Marriage" of Seretse Khama| accessdate = 2006-08-06| last = Rider| first = Clare| year = 2003| work = The Inner Temple Yearbook 2002/2003| publisher = [[Inner Temple]]| pages = }} <small>"Since, in their opinion, friendly and co-operative relations with South Africa and Rhodesia were essential to the well-being of the Bamangwato Tribe and the whole of the Protectorate, Serestse, who enjoyed neither, could not be deemed fit to rule. They concluded: 'We have no hesitation in finding that, but for his unfortunate marriage, his prospects as Chief are as bright as those of any native in Africa with whom we have come into contact'."</small></ref>
 
the government ordered the report suppressed (it would remain so for thirty years), and exiled Khama and his wife from Bechuanaland in 1951. It took many years of exile before the couple was allowed to live in Africa, and several more years before Khama became president of what is now [[Botswana]].
 
  
==In Australia==
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While [[arranged marriage]]s are traditionally contracted among families within the same community; far-sighted leaders have employed arranged marriages to bind together disparate [[culture]]s and nationalities in their realms. The most notable of these was [[Alexander the Great]], (356-323 B.C.E.) from Macedonia, who in the year 324 B.C.E. married 10,000 of his officers to [[Persia|Persian]] women. The mass wedding, held at [[Susa]], was a model of Alexander's desire to consummate the union of the Greek and Iranian peoples.
{{See also|Demographics of Australia}}
 
  
===Disparities in child-producing unions===
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In modern times, Reverend [[Sun Myung Moon]] advocates cross-cultural arranged marriages as a means of peace-building. Couples from enemy nations who work out great differences in the crucible of married life are said to contribute to the resolution of their nations’ historical and cultural [[conflict]]s. Thus, Reverend Moon has acted as a [[matchmaker]] for thousands of young people who have volunteered to participate in the breaking of racial, national, and religious barriers. The couples recognized the challenge of creating harmony between each other despite their different nationalities, cultures, and historical memories, as a way to contribute to the reconciliation between their lineages.
Interracial and inter ethnic partnering disparities are evident in [[birth]] statistics, with Australian women more likely to form partnerships and families with foreign men than Australian men with foreign women<ref>Australian Bureau of Statistics. Births, Australia. 3301.0. 2005. Chapter 8. Tables 8.14 and 8.15 "Country of Birth of Father" and "Country of Birth of Mother"</ref>.
 
  
In 2005 there were 255,481 live births in Australia. 71.5% of these infants were born to Australian-born fathers, and 75.9% were born to Australian-born mothers.
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==Intermarriage Today==
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Views towards inter-religious and interracial marriage have evolved considerably over time. What once was an un-thought of transgression against one's [[family]] and [[culture]] is now commonplace. Many argue that intermarriage has a beneficial effect in society by decreasing inter-religious and interracial tensions through the bonding of familial groups in marriage. Despite this, many mixed marriages still face persecution and discrimination by those not accepting of their lifestyles.
  
In unions between Australian and non-Australian born people that produce children, the Australian-born partner is more likely to be male when the female was born in [[North Asia]], [[Southeast Asia]], [[Russia]], [[Poland]], [[Hungary]], [[Switzerland]], [[Netherlands]], [[Canada]] or [[Zimbabwe]]. Australian-born women rather than men are more likely to produce children with partners born elsewhere.
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==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
However the disparity is generally only marginal when the foreign-born partner is from [[Western Europe]], [[New Zealand]] or the [[Americas]]. At an extreme there are 3.6 times more births to Australian-born men/Chinese-born women than to Australian-born women/Chinese-born men, while there are 2.7 times more births to Pakistani-born men/Australian-born women than to Pakistani-born women/Australian-born men.
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==References==
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* Gardner, Leroy. 2001. ''White/Black Race Mixing: An Essay on the Stereotypes and Realities of Interracial Marriage.'' Minneapolis, MN: Paragon House Publishers. ISBN 1557787964
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* Kornbluth, Doron. 2003. ''Why Marry Jewish: Surprising Reasons for Jews to Marry Jews.'' Targum/Feldheim. ISBN 1568712502
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* Root, Maria. 2001. ''Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage.'' Temple University Press. ISBN 1566398266
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* Silverstein, Alan. 1995. ''It All Begins with a Date: Jewish Concerns about Intermarriage: Jewish Concerns about Intermarriage.'' Jason Aronson/Rowman Littlefield. ISBN 1568215428
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* Yancey, George. 2003. ''Just Don't Marry One: Interracial Dating, Marriage, and Parenting.'' Valley Forge, PA: Judson Press. ISBN 081701439X
  
==In Africa==
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==External Links==
===Interracial marriage disparities===
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All links retrieved March 4, 2018.
[[Asians in South Africa|Indian (Asian)]] men have married many [[Africa]]n women in Africa. [[Asians in South Africa|Indian]]s have long been traders in [[East Africa]]. The [[British Empire]] brought workers into East Africa to build the [[Uganda Railway]]. Indians eventually populated [[South Africa]], [[Kenya]], [[Uganda]], [[Tanzania]], [[Rwanda]], [[Rhodesia]] and [[Zaire]]. These interracial unions were mostly unilateral marriages between Indian men and East African women.<ref>Color Q World. [http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/article.aspx?d=Africa&x=Indians Jotawa: Afro-Asians in East Africa]. September 1, 2006. </ref>
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* MSMBC Associated Press article [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18090277/ After 40 years, interracial marriage flourishing]
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* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09698a.htm Catholic view of mixed marriage] from the ''Catholic Encyclopaedia''
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* Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen [http://www.chabad.org/library/article.asp?AID=145413 Intermarriage] Chabad-Lubavich Center Media. ''chabad.org''.
 +
* [http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Nov05/interracial.couples.ssl.html Interracial relationships are on the increase in U.S., but decline with age, Cornell study finds]  
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* Michael A. Fletcher [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/daily/dec98/melt29.htm Interracial Marriages Eroding Barriers] ''www.washingtonpost.com''.  
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* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=163&letter=I Jewish view of intermarrige] from the ''Jewish Encyclopaedia''
  
  
 
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{{credits|Interreligious_marriage|147107822|Interracial_marriage|148551575}}

Latest revision as of 12:55, 7 February 2023

Othello and Desdemona from William Shakespeare's Othello, a play concerning a biracial couple.

Intermarriage is the marriage between two people of different backgrounds. This background can be either religious (such as a Christian marrying a Jew) or racial (such as an Asian person marrying a person of African descent). Views towards each type of intermarriage have evolved throughout history, although each remains controversial in certain sects of modern society.

Intermarriage is a form of exogamy, or marrying outside of one's social group. Whether that group is defined by religion, race, or other difference, the difference is a barrier that is not easy to cross. When historical meetings of the groups have led to conflict and violence, the fear of the other becomes hatred and the barrier almost impenetrable. Marrying and producing children across such a barrier is difficult if not unthinkable and impossible.

With increasing contact between different peoples of the planet, views towards inter-religious and inter-racial marriage have changed considerably. Many such marriages have taken place, and the children, while still experiencing some isolation, have begun to find their place in the world. In fact, it may be that the effect of intermarriage is to overcome the barriers and tensions between those of different social groups through the bonding of new familial groups. Such families may be the foundation of a happier world of peace and harmony.

Overview

Frederick Douglass with his second wife Helen Pitts Douglass (sitting) who was white, a famous nineteenth century American example of "miscegenation." The woman standing is her sister Eva Pitts.

Intermarriage is the marriage of people from two different religious or racial backgrounds. Participants in intermarriage have faced social difficulties throughout history for various reasons including prejudice, ignorance, and xenophobia. Those whose marriages involve different races have suffered racial discrimination, if not outright rejection by societies in which miscegenation (the mixing of races) was illegal. Those who marry from a different religious tradition may also face rejection, especially if one of the traditions teaches that only those faithful to their beliefs receive salvation and can go to heaven; all others being condemned to eternal hell.

Intermarriage is a form of exogamy, or marrying outside of one's social group. With increasing contact between different peoples of the planet, relationships and marriages that cross racial and religious boundaries have become more common. However, couples and the children of intermarriage face issues of social isolation and lack of definitive cultural identity.

Interreligious Marriage

Religion is a difficult subject to broach for romantically involved couples. Crossing religious lines for the sake of marriage was once, and still is, considered by some to be an act of apostasy. The traditional view of promoting marriage within one's faith community stems from the fact that religion has traditionally dominated culture and social life, so to wed someone outside of this group would be wholly alien. There are still many reasons why religion acts as a barrier to marriage:

  • Some religions view their rules on marriage as commandments from God.
  • In a few religions adherents view themselves as a priestly people, with a specific mission to carry out.
  • Some people believe that introducing two contradictory belief systems into a marriage is grounds for marital strife, and increases the rate of divorce.
  • Some believe that having parents of two different religions causes psychological stress on the children in such a marriage, as they often are effectively forced to "choose" one parent's faith over another.
  • Religious intolerance leads some to believe that a person professing a different faith is considered incompatible and not worth marrying.
  • There is the possibility of temptation to "wrong" practices by the "outsider" spouse, as well as the possibility of the children growing up in the "other" faith, or torn between two faiths.
  • Some religions, such as the Druze religion, are closed communities and do not accept new members, whether through marriage or through conversion.

When a man and a woman professing different religions want to marry, and the religious laws of the faith upheld by one of them forbid this, they might:

  • abandon the relationship and seek a partner of their own faith,
  • consider the conversion of one spouse,
  • live as if married with no ceremony,
  • have a purely civil marriage ceremony, or
  • if one of the two religions does allow interreligious marriage, hold the wedding according to the ritual of the accepting religion.

These opinions are shifting, however. Increased foreign travel and a trend towards secularism have de-emphasized the importance of religion in the lives of many. Attitudes towards inter-religious marriage are becoming more liberal in the developed world, removing the once powerful stigma that may have suppressed inter-religious marriages in the past. Many see intermarriage as a good opportunity for diversity and are in fact attracted to others specifically because they are not members of their own religious sect. While some may only be interested in experiencing something different, for others intermarriage is seen as a way to break down barriers and bring harmony between different faith communities.

Views of religions on interreligious marriage

Judaism

Intermarriage in Judaism is informed by two basics of Jewish law. First, the child of a Jewish woman is considered to be Jewish, regardless of the faith of the father, while, historically, the child of a male Jew and a female non-Jew is not. Second, a Jewish marriage is, by definition, a contract between two Jews, involving a Ketubah or Jewish prenuptial agreement. This states that the husband commits to provide food, clothing, and marital relations to his wife, and that he will pay a specified sum of money if he divorces her. If he dies and leaves her as a widow, she can collect the Ketubah money from his estate. The Ketubah is considered an integral part of a Jewish marriage. Intermarriage under strict Jewish law is therefore not only forbidden, but actually impossible.

Orthodox Judaism strictly forbids interreligious marriage as well as any sexual intercourse with a member of a different faith. Secular intermarriage is seen as a deliberate rejection of Judaism, and an intermarried person is effectively cut off from most of the Orthodox community.

Conservative Judaism rejects intermarriages as being a violation of halakha (the collective corpus of Jewish religious law), and as causing severe demographic harm to the Jewish people. Conservative rabbis are not allowed to perform intermarriages. However, the Leadership Council of Conservative Judaism has a more nuanced understanding of this issue than does Orthodoxy. The Conservative movement has stated:

In the past, intermarriage … was viewed as an act of rebellion, a rejection of Judaism. Jews who intermarried were essentially excommunicated. But now, intermarriage is often the result of living in an open society. If our children end up marrying non-Jews, we should not reject them. We should continue to give our love and by that retain a measure of influence in their lives, Jewish and otherwise. Life consists of constant growth and our adult children may yet reach a stage when Judaism has new meaning for them. However, the marriage between a Jew and non-Jew is not a celebration for the Jewish community. We therefore reach out to the couple with the hope that the non-Jewish partner will move closer to Judaism and ultimately choose to convert. Since we know that over seventy percent of children of intermarried couples are not being raised as Jews...we want to encourage the Jewish partner to maintain his/her Jewish identity, and raise their children as Jews. (Leadership Council of Conservative Judaism, Statement on Intermarriage. Adopted on March 7, 1995)

Reform Judaism and Reconstructionist Judaism (known internationally as Progressive Judaism) discourage intermarriage, but, since they do not view halakha as binding, they have no mechanism for legal prohibition of the practice in the manner of the Conservative and Orthodox movements. Progressive rabbinical associations have no blanket prohibition on their members officiating at intermarriages. As a result, some Progressive Rabbis do perform such weddings without fear of the sanction faced by their Conservative counterparts. Intermarried Progressive Jews are encouraged to raise their children in the Jewish faith, and to become part of the local Jewish community, even if the Gentile partner does not convert to Judaism. Gentile spouses of Jews are welcome in Progressive synagogues as long as they do not proselytise.

Christianity

Many Christians believe that anyone has the freedom to choose her or his partner for life, and that love has no boundaries. This attitude is found most often among those who may be identified as progressive or liberal Christians.

Some Christian denominations forbid interreligious marriage, drawing from 1 Corinthians 7 and 2 Corinthians 6:14, and in some cases Deuteronomy 7:3. The Mormon Church emphasizes the doctrine of "celestial marriage" in which two people are eternally bound through marriage. Mormons believe this celestial marriage can only occur between members of the Mormon church, and thus oppose interreligious marriage for their faithful.

The Catholic church requires permission for mixed marriages, which it terms all unions between Catholics and baptized non-Catholics, but such marriages are valid, though illicit, without it: the pastor of the Catholic party has authority to grant such permission. Marriages between a Catholic and an un-baptized person are not sacramental, and fall under the impediment of disparity of worship and are invalid without a dispensation, for which authority lies with the ordinary of the place of marriage.

Bahá'í Faith

According to the Bahá'í Faith, all religions are inspired by God, therefore interreligious marriage is allowed. In that case, the Bahá'í ceremony should be performed, and the non-Bahá'í rite or ceremony can also be performed. If it is the case that both ceremonies are performed, the non-Bahá'í ceremony should not invalidate the Bahá'í ceremony and it should be made clear to all that the Bahá'í partner is a Bahá'í and is not accepting the religion of the other partner by going through with the ceremony. The Bahá'í partner should also abstain from undertaking any vows or statements that commit the Bahá'í to any declaration of faith in another religion or that are contrary to the principles of the Bahá'í Faith. The two ceremonies should happen on the same day, but the order is not important. The Bahá'í ceremony may be performed in the place of worship of the other religion provided that it is given equal respect to that of the non-Bahá'í ceremony and is clearly distinct from the non-Bahá'í ceremony.

Hinduism

Hinduism declares that there are always innumerable paths to God, and that one’s belief or perception of God is an individual matter and best left to the individual to decide his own path.

Thus, Hindus have never hesitated to respect the freedom of other faiths to coexist and flourish and so interreligious marriages are accepted in Hindu society. It also does not put any obligation of faith on the non-Hindu partner. Inter-caste marriages were, however, problematic, but this too is becoming more acceptable with time. In metropolitan cities it is common to find couples with different faith, caste, and regional background. There are numerous laws in the Indian legal system, safeguarding interfaith marriage. Examples of such marriages occasionally appear in Rudyard Kipling's stories.

Islam

Islam allows a man to marry a non-Muslim only if she is Christian or Jewish. The wife need not adopt any Muslim laws, and the husband is not allowed to keep her from going to church or synagogue. The early jurists of the most prominent schools of Islamic jurisprudence ruled in Fiqh law that the marriage of a Muslim man to a Christian or Jewish women is mukruh (reprehensible) if they live in a non-Muslim country. The Caliph Umar (634–644) denied interfaith marriage for Muslim men during his command of the ummah.

Fiqh also forbids Muslim women from marrying non-Muslim men, although there is nothing in the Qur'an nor the Sunnah that explicitly prohibits such unions. Some Muslim scholars go so far as to state that such a marriage is an act of apostasy, but with the growing number of such marriages, this position is being questioned. In some Muslim countries, if a non-Muslim woman is married to a non-Muslim, and she converts to Islam, the marriage is suspended until her husband converts to Islam. When he converts a new marriage is not needed.

Interracial Marriage

Interracial marriage was formerly seen as grounds for shunning members of some societies. Xenophobia and outright racism bred close-minded laws and social mores against miscegenation. The taboo against interracial marriage has been largely lifted worldwide today as the world shrinks through easier travel and globalization. Love has proved incentive enough for many to overcome the barriers placed by a jealous old guard opposed to mixed marriages.

United States

A black/white couple enjoying a moment during their wedding on the beach in Monterey, California

In Social Trends in America and Strategic Approaches to the Negro Problem (1948), Gunnar Myrdal ranked the social areas where restrictions were imposed by Southern whites on the freedom of African-Americans through racial segregation. Ranked from the least to the most important were found to be: jobs, courts and police, politics, basic public facilities, “social equality” including dancing, handshaking, and most important, marriage. This ranking scheme seems to explain the way in which the barriers against desegregation fell. The segregation in basic public facilities, seen as of less importance than intermarriage, was abolished with the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The most tenacious form of legal segregation, the banning of interracial marriage, was not fully lifted until the last anti-miscegenation laws were struck down in 1967.[1]

Interracial couples have made up an increasingly large percentage of the population of all American married couples. In 1960, 0.4 percent of all married couples were interracial. In 1992, 2.2 percent of all couples were interracial.[2]

United Kingdom

As of 2001, two percent of all UK marriages were inter-ethnic. Despite having a much lower non-white population (nine percent), mixed marriages are as common as in the United States. For example, Black British men are significantly more likely to have non-black wives than African American men; 18 percent of UK black African husbands, 29 percent of UK black Caribbean husbands, and 48 percent of other Black British husbands have a wife from a different ethnic group.[3]

According to the UK 2001 census, Black British males were around 50 percent more likely than black females to marry outside their race, whereas British Chinese women were twice as likely as their male counterparts to marry someone from a different ethnic group. Among British Asians (South Asians, not including Chinese), Pakistani and Bangladeshi males were twice as likely to to have an inter-ethnic marriage than their female counterparts, while Indian and "Other Asian" males were more likely to have an inter-ethnic marriage than their female counterparts by a smaller percentage.

In Africa

Indian (Asian) men have married many African women in Africa. Indians have long been traders in East Africa. The British Empire brought workers into East Africa to build the Uganda Railway. Indians eventually populated South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Rhodesia, and Zaire. These interracial unions were mostly marriages between Indian men and East African women.[4]

In Asia

Many Asian cultures, such as China and Korea have indelibly strong familial ties, which have often emphasized marriages that will satisfy all of the members of the family. As a result of this tight family network, marriage to outsiders has been seen as taboo. For example, in Japan, non-ethnic Japanese residents have been called gaijin (meaning outsiders) and discriminated against in marriage and other relationships. This norm is changing as large Asian nations take their place in the world stage.

Arranged intermarriages

While arranged marriages are traditionally contracted among families within the same community; far-sighted leaders have employed arranged marriages to bind together disparate cultures and nationalities in their realms. The most notable of these was Alexander the Great, (356-323 B.C.E.) from Macedonia, who in the year 324 B.C.E. married 10,000 of his officers to Persian women. The mass wedding, held at Susa, was a model of Alexander's desire to consummate the union of the Greek and Iranian peoples.

In modern times, Reverend Sun Myung Moon advocates cross-cultural arranged marriages as a means of peace-building. Couples from enemy nations who work out great differences in the crucible of married life are said to contribute to the resolution of their nations’ historical and cultural conflicts. Thus, Reverend Moon has acted as a matchmaker for thousands of young people who have volunteered to participate in the breaking of racial, national, and religious barriers. The couples recognized the challenge of creating harmony between each other despite their different nationalities, cultures, and historical memories, as a way to contribute to the reconciliation between their lineages.

Intermarriage Today

Views towards inter-religious and interracial marriage have evolved considerably over time. What once was an un-thought of transgression against one's family and culture is now commonplace. Many argue that intermarriage has a beneficial effect in society by decreasing inter-religious and interracial tensions through the bonding of familial groups in marriage. Despite this, many mixed marriages still face persecution and discrimination by those not accepting of their lifestyles.

Notes

  1. Loving v. Virginia University of Michigan. Retrieved August 15, 2007.
  2. Race of Wife by Race of Husband US Census.
  3. Inter-Ethnic Marriage: two percent of all marriages are inter-ethnic. National Statistics. (2005). Retrieved August 23, 2007.
  4. Jotawa: Afro-Asians in East Africa. Color Q World. Retrieved September 1, 2006.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Gardner, Leroy. 2001. White/Black Race Mixing: An Essay on the Stereotypes and Realities of Interracial Marriage. Minneapolis, MN: Paragon House Publishers. ISBN 1557787964
  • Kornbluth, Doron. 2003. Why Marry Jewish: Surprising Reasons for Jews to Marry Jews. Targum/Feldheim. ISBN 1568712502
  • Root, Maria. 2001. Love's Revolution: Interracial Marriage. Temple University Press. ISBN 1566398266
  • Silverstein, Alan. 1995. It All Begins with a Date: Jewish Concerns about Intermarriage: Jewish Concerns about Intermarriage. Jason Aronson/Rowman Littlefield. ISBN 1568215428
  • Yancey, George. 2003. Just Don't Marry One: Interracial Dating, Marriage, and Parenting. Valley Forge, PA: Judson Press. ISBN 081701439X

External Links

All links retrieved March 4, 2018.


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